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Ray Salemi's avatar

The sermon falls squarely in the Jewish tradition of Midrash, in which we take a Bible story and fill in the details. And what a fabulous Midrash it is! I love the detail of the captain who knows that Jonah is dishonest but likes the color of his money.

I'd always felt bad for the sailors who lost their cargo to Jonah's storm, but no longer.

Jonah's an amazing character, for while he repents and goes to Ninevah to prophesy that the city will fall, he is enraged that they actually repent and so God does not destroy them. Once Jonah sees that God is not going to destroy Ninevah he basically tells God, "See! I told you that this would be a tremendous waste of time!"

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Alex Marden's avatar

Chapter 10 floored me! While I see that Melville's prose cannot loosen itself from describing Queequeg as the Other, I was so moved by the marriage sequence and Ishmael running a logic puzzle to conclude that God wants him to try his friend's form of worship. Like, yes, the specific descriptors for Queequeg haven't aged well, but this is a beautiful scene about empathy and overcoming one's prejudices.

"In a countryman, this sudden flame of friendship would have seemed far too premature, a thing to be much distrusted; but in this simple savage those old rules would not apply." Melville repeatedly calls Queequeg a "savage," and it makes me wince -- but by the time Ishmael develops this intense overnight bond, seeing himself in what once seemed alien, I thought you could read that same line and apply "savage" to Ish. "In *me,* the old rules would not apply." I like that idea.

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